Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis or, more correctly, juvenile chronic polyarthritis with its many clinical manifestations can be separated into the Still-syndrome with acute beginning, high fever and a high percentage of extra-articulalar, i.e. visceral symptoms, and the chronic polyarthritis in the more strict sense with non-visceral symptoms. The subsepsis allergica should be regarded as a subseptic first stage of the Still syndrome. The Still-syndrome implies a
systemic disease
mainly of the reticulo-endothelial system, with carditis, nephropathy, recurrent erythemas, and a progressing polyarthritis. Later symptoms are amyloidosis, chronic nephritis, myo- and pericarditis, and artheriitis necroticans. Predominanly the involvement of the kidneys is the reasons for the high mortality rate of 13%. Chronic polyarthritis in the strict sense is similar in children and adults, though in children rheumatic factors are rarely detected. The exsudative form of arthritis tends to cause early deterioration. Joint symptoms are distributed asymmetrically and show locally inflammed growth otherwise less common in Still-syndrome. Spondylitis cervicalis rapidly causes ankylosis. Atlanto-axial-arthritis with consequent atlanto-axial dislocation can be the reason for neurological disturbances. Juvenile mono- or oligo-arthritis often turns into polyarthritis; but for joints the prognosis is more favourable. In contrast, rheumatoid iridocyclitis as found in 22% of the cases causes unfavourable complications because symptoms are not noticed in time so that treatment is often too late. Juvenile spondylitis ankylosans begins with a peripheral arthritic stage which is not easily distinguished from chronic polyarthritis. The male sex, mono- or oligoarthritis of the outer extremities,
pain
in the heel, atlanto-axial-arthritis, iridocyclitis, and a positive HLA of 27 give a diagnostic clue. -- Characteristics of the therapy will be discussed.
...
PMID:[Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and related collagen diseases. Clinical aspects (author's transl)]. 1 66
The nonophthalmic physician confronted by a patient with a red eye should be able to distinguish common microbial or allergic conjunctivitis from potentially blinding disorders, such as acute angle closure glaucoma, uveitis, or herpes simplex keratitis, and should remain alert for an associated
systemic disease
, such as rheumatoid arthritis, polycythemia, or carotid cavernous fistula. The physician should approach the red eye systematically: take a careful history, including type of
pain
; measure visual acuity; observe the pattern of redness, the type of discharge, the shape of the pupil, and the opacities of the media; and measure the intraocular pressure.
...
PMID:The red eye. 30 93
Four individuals with severe, chronic, recurrent splinter hemorrhages are reported. The duration of splinter hemorrhages ranged between six and 30 years. The fresh lesions were associated with burning sharp
pain
and tenderness which lasted for a few days. Although commonly located in the distal one third of nails, they were often found in the middle and the proximal third as well. In-depth review of these individuals' history, physical examination, and laboratory values failed to reveal recurrent trauma, drug use, or any underlying
systemic disease
. Based on these findings we conclude that chronic subungual splinter hemorrhages are nonspecific findings and may be seen in both health and disease states.
...
PMID:Recurrent atraumatic subungual splinter hemorrhages in healthy individuals. 50 75
Patients requiring a major amputation for ischemia are frequently gravely ill. Physiologic amputation obtained by freezing the leg, usually with a tourniquet, will permit delay and intensive preoperative therapy. In an efficient, safe, and convenient method which we have developed and used in 46 patients, a pump circulates antifreeze solution through a specially constructed boot. The last 32 patients so treated have been analyzed as to indications and results. Advantages obtained control of sepsis, correction of diabetic coma, dialysis for chronic renal failure, improvement in congestive heart failure, and improvement in pulmonary function. Four patients had successful below-knee amputations after control of infection that had previously seemed to dictate above-knee amputation. The control of
pain
and odor, the resultant appreciation of the family, and the lessened demand on nursing staff offer worthwhile benefits in many of the patients, even in some in whom advanced
systemic disease
prevented survival.
...
PMID:Freezing an extremity in preparation for amputation. 68 74
Two cases of neural muscular atrophy of the Charcot-Marie-Tooth-Hoffmann type with strain-dependent
pain
in the leg similar to intermittent claudication are reported. While the pathogenesis of a neurogenic intermittent claudication appears to be reasonably explained by a pathological narrowness of the lumbar spinal duct, this question must remain open in the cases of neurospinal
systemic disease
described.
...
PMID:[The concept of neurogenic intermittent claudication. A rare form of intermittent limping in neurologic system disease]. 81 12
Mondor's disease is described on the basis of 4 patients of our hospital. The typical finding is a subcuttaneous cord of about 5 min in diameter along the chest wall. The lenght varies from 10 to 40 cm. There is no significant preference of one sex. Often there are no symptoms like
pain
or tension of the skin. The clinical and histological examinations show in most cases a thrombosed vein at the junction of the subcutaneous tissue. Treatment does not result in a significant change of the natural course. Our study confirms, that Mondor's disease is benign and does not connote
systemic disease
or cancer.
...
PMID:[Mondor's disease]. 84 50
Clinical features and laboratory findings of 300 inpatients with vibration disease before and after treatments were reviewed. Having been using chain saws or pneumatic hammers for a long period, the patients were afflicted with Raynaud's phenomenon, numbness,
pain
or stiffness of fingers,
pain
of elbows and neck, stiffness of shoulders and lumbago. They had high incidences of complaints due to the disorder of the central nervous system, especially of the higher center of the autonomic nervous system; i.e. headache (52.0%), palmar hyperhidrosis (70.0%), forgetfulness (78.2%), fatiguability (61.3%), tinnitus (41.8%), impotence (55.1%), etc. Laboratory findings of the autonomic nerve activity tests, electroencephalograms and audiograms also suggested the disorder of the central nervous system. Treatments during three months had improved significantly the subjective symptoms and the objective findings (p less than 0.05 to 0.001). Thus, vibration disease should be considered as a
systemic disease
, including disorders of the central nervous system, especially of the higher center of the autonomic nervous system, and disturbances of the peripheral functions.
...
PMID:Clinical features and laboratory findings of vibration disease: a review of 300 cases. 91 75
Of 116 patients with
pain
in the plantar portion of the heel, nineteen proved on follow-up to have
systemic disease
as the etiology. Of these treated with phenylbutazone, 71 per cent showed good results and a similar percentage benefited equally from injections of cortisone derivatives. Only two patients required surgical procedures, and these were successful in both.
...
PMID:Plantar fasciitis. The painful heel syndrome. 115 Jul 11
Reactivation of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) leads to localized zoster (shingles), a syndrome characterized by
pain
and a vesicular rash. Rarely, patients experience radicular
pain
without zosteriform rash, cases that have been regarded as zoster sine herpete (zoster without rash). Virologic evidence for zoster sine herpete is sparse. However, VZV can produce other neurologic and visceral diseases in the absence of rash or radicular
pain
. The clinical and virologic features of zoster sine herpete and other disorders produced by VZV without rash are reviewed. Evidence is also presented for the detection of VZV DNA in human blood mononuclear cells of elderly individuals in the absence of skin lesions or other VZV-associated neurologic or
systemic disease
.
...
PMID:Varicella-zoster virus reactivation without rash. 132 Jun 48
Five cases of organ-limited laryngeal amyloid deposits with no evidence of
systemic disease
are reported in detail and classified immunohistochemically. In four of the five cases the amyloid reacted with anti-A lambda antibodies and in one case with anti-A kappa antibodies. Four of our five female patients had already passed the fifth decade of life. One was 11 years old. Hoarseness was the predominant symptom in four cases, in which we found amyloid deposits in the glottic area. Only one patient, with amyloid deposits in the aryepiglottic fold, complained of
pain
. The therapy of choice of idiopathic, localized, or organ-limited amyloid deposits without underlying disease may be local excision. In one of the cases reported in this paper, a laryngofissure was performed, and in another a partial laser resection was performed. No therapy was performed in three of our five cases. In the larynx, as in many other locations and only if possible, removal at intervals is more feasible than radical resection, because these amyloid tumors grow slowly.
...
PMID:Organ-limited laryngeal amyloid deposits: clinical, morphological, and immunohistochemical results of five cases. 151 56
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>